Women dance at parliament demanding condoms in schools |
"If ever I’m spotted walking into a beer hall to buy a pack of Durex condoms, my father will beat me with a rubber belt, my teachers would banish me from the classroom, our church pastor will expel me from the Sunday choir band.”
Nancy, whose name has been changed to protect her
identity, is a 17-year-old biology
student at a Baptist-run school in Chimanimani, a mostly rural part of eastern
Zimbabwe.
“Condoms are a banned word in our church youth
seminars,” she said. “On rare occasions our church pastor speaks, he shouts,
‘condoms are full of holes, beware! Condoms stick inside women! Abortion is
Satan´s invention!”
“I, my family, would earn the scorn of the community
if a teacher or pastor discovers a pack of condoms in your school bag,” says
Nancy.
Between February and September of this year, Nancy
says 10 of her classmates became pregnant and were kicked out of school despite
directives from the Zimbabwe Education Ministry and constitutional
court mandating that pregnant girls must not be excluded from
finishing high school.
“I know for sure religious stigma towards condoms
put girls in harm here,” Nancy said of her classmates.
Teenage
pregnancies fire and church condom apathy:
Rural eastern Zimbabwe, a bastion of church
authority, is witnessing the country´s fastest growing rate of teenage
pregnancies.
According to Zimbabwe’s Demographic
Health Survey, the fertility rate among regional teenage girls between the ages
of 15 and 19 increased from 99 per 1,000 to 115 per 1,000 between 2005 and
2015.
Observers and some experts attribute
the rate rise to church restrictions and stigma around condoms and other forms
of contraception.
With Zimbabwe´s government deep in
debt, churches play a critical role in providing free or subsidized sexual
health clinics, maternity homes, surgeries and schools in this region.
“And churches strictly discourage
the debate on condoms within their assemblies,” said Bishop Fani Moyo, a
sociologist and founder of The Progressive Churches Sexual Health Forum of
Zimbabwe.
“It is seen as a profanity for
Sunday school girls to introduce a sermon on condoms publicly.”
But authorities take a relaxed view. “Parents are
free to drop in condoms when they pack food and books in their children´s
schoolbags,” encourages Zimbabwe´s education minister, Mr. Lazarus Dokora.
At Rusitu Mission Hospital, a large
institution run by United
Baptists Church in Zimbabwe, nurses motion patients to participate in morning
prayer sessions before giving out medication.
“If you ask for condoms when you get
into a relationship, church nurses will report you to the church school
principal. A beating follows. We girls endure sex
without protection.”
Many businesses and tribal courts in
the region also restrict the distribution of condoms to teenage girls.
“It is an offense punishable by a
fine of two goats if a school girl is seen buying condoms in a beer tavern in
my village,” explains Sam Chirandu, a tribal village head in east Zimbabwe.
“School girls mustn’t do sex before marriage. It is against our social values.”
Unlike in neighboring South Africa
where condoms are widely available, often for free, in rural Zimbabwe they are
almost hidden.
“For fear of stigma and beating, I
have to cleverly send my 18-year-old boyfriend to buy us condoms from
supermarkets, and hope the pastor or his parents don’t see him with them. Each
pack costs $1. The price is too much for teenage girls,” Nancy said.
Child marriages fueling churches:
Rural east Zimbabwe is home to the
Johane Marine Apostolic Church denomination, a strictly Africanist church sect
that draws tens of thousands of followers and is wildly popular among
Zimbabwe´s influential government ministers, security chefs and diplomats.
The denomination is famous for its
promotion of polygamy and child marriage and for its fiery dislike of condoms
and other forms of contraception.
In the district where this church thrives, the
majority of school girls, some as young as 10, have been married to older men
from their church.
“Most marriages are arranged between adult church
men and underage girls. Request for condoms can result in
a teenage bride being divorced harshly,” said Edson Tsvakai, a community health
project coordinator at The Union for the Development of Apostolic Churches in
Zimbabwe-Africa (UDA-CIZA).
Zimbabwe´s Ministry of Education and Culture says
only 1/3 of the 10,000 local girls who enroll in high school graduate after four years.
Tsvakai pins the high dropout rate on “runaway
teenage pregnancies,”
“The police are the biggest let down
in early forced child marriages and pregnancies, as they have continued to turn
a blind eye to these religious crimes,” he said. “Prosecutions die down
quickly. Church sect leaders are secretive, and in high favor with political
elites."
The country´s Domestic Violence Act
prohibits marriage under the age of 16 for both girls and boys, but enforcement
is weak in rural districts where poverty
incentivizes underreporting.
Noah
Pashapa, a bishop of the Pentecostals Liberty Churches International, in Harare and one of Zimbabwe’s most famous
preachers holds a pragmatic view on contraception.
“Condoms are a necessary evil. They save lives and
marriages,” he said.
Pashapa keeps condoms in his office
for needy couples and sexually active youth. He says Zimbabwe´s HIV/AIDS
crisis, which contributed to
29,000 deaths in 2015 according to UNAIDS, is slowly breaking down the
Church's high moral ground on sexual abstinence among youths. http://bit.ly/2gPe7WT
He would like to see a future in
which “condoms should be distributed in churches – accompanied by information
promoting abstinence and informed choices among the youth.”
About the writer: Ray Mwareya is the editor of the Women
Taboos Radio. He tweets at @RMwareya
Domestic Violence Case 17 CRB 2896 State of Ohio, Westlake vs Yoofi Ocran. Link:https://rrcourt.net/eservices/searchresults.page?x=LCagSTM32kxPK8ZUo2WvRTQUhyRn7s0bPhbjFrcnV2W*vfgXpmpW5cVv4-gjGpBnBMZLTwS2M*pS8oAevkp0AA.
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